s going to be a great year

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It’s Going to be a Great Year

One California contact says the general economy is

slowing there. The dock strike problems there have

proved a real problem for imported species, making it

impossible to get containers unloaded. In addition to

that, he noted, the California political climate right now

isn’t great.

Prices went up for awhile according to a Washington

hardwood supplier, but then they flattened out.

Currently prices are holding steady. More logging will

come as the weather improves.

* Welcome New Member

* Outlook

* Industry

* Legislative

* Motivate

* Upcoming Events

In This Issue:

No. 554 May 2015

WHA Board of Directors

Lee Jimerson President

Kurt Landwehr Vice President

Nils Dickmann Treasurer

Mike Lipke Immediate Past President

Scott Leavengood

Doug Martin

Jamie Price

Alysia Sargent

John Smith

Lindy Stallard

Jeff Stoddard

David Sweitzer Secretary/Manager P.O. Box 1095 Camas, WA 98607

Ph: (360) 835-1600 Fax: (360) 835-1910

Web: www.westernhardwood.org Email: [email protected]

Member

Advertise in

Hardwood

Stand

Tuesday – August 18, 2015

AM World Class Columbia River Salmon Fishing Derby - prizes for everyone

Evening Exhibitor Showcase - Reception, World Forestry Center

Wednesday – August 19, 2015

AM Exhibitor Showcase, World Forestry Center

The Green Mafioso – Scott Taylor, Green Endeavor, Inc.

Promoting American Hardwoods – Mike Snow, American Hardwood Export Council

Noon Exhibitor Showcase & Lunch

PM Transportation & Logistics – Steve Zambo, Ally Global Logistics

Federal Policy and the Hardwood Industry – Dana Cole, Hardwood Federation

Innovations in Wood Use – Scott Leavengood, Oregon Wood Innovation Center, OSU

Hardwood Checkoff Panel

Evening Exhibitor Showcase - Reception - Dinner - Auction

Thursday – August 20, 2015

AM Tour - Tree farm

PM Golf Tournament, RedTail Golf Course

Barbeque dinner - Auction - Raffle, RedTail Golf Course

Friday – August 21, 2015

AM Tour - Hardwood Sawmill

Register online: www.westernhardwood.org

Register OnlineRegistration includes meeting, 2 receptions,

1 lunch, 1 dinner, and 2 tours. Member $195Non-Member $375Spouse $100

World Class Columbia River Salmon Derby limited space, reservation deadline May 15th $225

Golf Tournament (inc. green fee, cart) & BBQ Dinner $95

This event will bring together primary producers, secondary manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors, importers and exporters for the opportunity to establish relationships and develop future business. Suppliers of goods and services to attending companies will benefit from the opportunity to make contact with key people.

To be a Sponsor, Exhibitor, or Auction Donor and to Register for the Convention, sign up online or email:Western Hardwood Association

P.O. Box 1095, Camas, WA 98607 USA • 360-835-1600 • www.westernhardwood.org • [email protected]

2015 Annual Convention · August 18-21, 2015World Forestry Center · Portland, OR

Speakers · Exhibits · Golf · Fishing

Western Hardwood Association

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Western hardwood industry.

for a sustainable, pro�table, and growing

1955 - 2015

Western Hardwood Association 2015 Annual Convention

For a list of nearby hotels, check our website.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that

the consumer price index increased for the second

straight month in March, up 0.2 percent and new

housing starts increased 2.0 percent, up from an

annualized 908,000 in February to 926,000 in March.

The figures, however, remain below the 1,072,000

rate in January. Manufacturing production increased

by 0.1 percent in March. This followed three months

of weaker data, including declines in both January

and February. Overall, the weaker-than-desired

economy in the first quarter of this year has begun to

lead many to downgrade their outlook for the coming

months. - excerpted from National Association of

Manufacturers Monday Economic Report (4/20/15)

Exhibitors! Sign up today!

Table space is limited!

The Convention Agenda will include exclusive time

slots in the morning and afternoon on both days for

attendee exhibitor visitation.

$300 includes 8' skirted table, does not include

registration.

Exhibitors - Sign up online.

Sponsor Levels

Sponsors - Sign up online.

On the go?

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Like us on Facebook!

National Association of Manufacturers Monday Economic

Report (4/13/15)

$5,000

Full page ad in program book, feature in promotion materials, recognition in monthly newsletter, 3 free registrations, free exhibit

$3,000

3/4 page ad in program book, feature in promotion materials, recognition in monthly newsletter, 2 free registrations, free exhibit

$2,000

2/3 page ad in program book, feature in promotion materials, recognition in monthly newsletter, 1 free registration, on-site banner.

$1000

1/2 page ad in program book, feature in promotion materials, recognition in monthly newsletter, 1 free registration, on-site sponsor

$500

1/4 page ad in program book, feature in promotion materials, recognition in monthly newsletter, on-site sponsor banner.

Search for: 'WHA convention' Press 'Join'

Food for Thought: The strategy of

“Greenspeak,” is this how the West will be lost? For

more than 50 years, there has been a growing

campaign against the beneficial use of natural

resources. The campaigners have several names:

preservationists, conservationists, radical

environmentalists, and greens. - Scott, T. W. "T.W. Scott:

The Strategy of." Healthy Forests, Healthy Communities. N.p., 20

Apr. 2015. Web. 22 Apr. 2015.

According to an editorial in the Eugene,

Oregon Register-Guard, Oregon has carried wildfire

insurance for the past four decades. In that period,

the state has collected $44 million more in claims

than it has paid in premiums. With that claims

history, it’s no surprise that the premium has climbed.

Indeed, the surprise is that Oregon was able to buy

this form of insurance for any price this year. The

state should begin to prepare for a time when

coverage is not available by building an emergency

wildfire reserve fund and stepping up efforts to

reduce the severity of forest fires. - "Insuring against

Wildfire | Opinion | The Register-Guard | Eugene, Oregon." The

Register-Guard. N.p., 21 Apr. 2015. Web. 28 Apr. 2015.

In the Pacific Northwest, the U.S. Forest

Service is set to open more than 80,000 acres for

potential geothermal power development. Companies

would then be able to apply for permits to build power

plants that would harness the heat beneath the

surface to spin turbines and generate electricity. All

of this would be taking place in the Mount Baker-

Snoqualmie National Forest in Washington state.—Ahearn, Ashley. "In Northwest, A Push To Protect Forest As

Geothermal Projects Near.". NPR, 20 Apr. 2015. Web. 28 Apr.

2015.

Earth Day 2015: The massive federal land

holdings in the western United States continue to

irritate many folks living west of the 100th Meridian.

According to Holly Fretwell of the Property and

Environment Research Center (PERC) and Montana

State University, nearly half of the western states is

owned by the federal government including over 60

percent of Alaska and approximately 80 percent of

Nevada - Mehan, G. Tracy, III. "Earth Day 2015: Federal Lands

Edition." The American Spectator. N.p., 21 Apr. 2015. Web. 28

Apr. 2015.

Although it may seem counter-intuitive, it

would be better if we built buildings from wood than

from concrete, brick, aluminum and steel. We use

millions of tons of these modern materials every year.

They have many valuable properties, but are energy-

intensive to create, accounting for around 16% of the

entire planets' fossil fuel production. Instead we could

be using wood, which is also strong, renewable, and

plentiful – we use only a fraction of the world’s

available forestry resources. - Oliver, Chad. "Swap Steel,

Concrete, and Brick for Wood â Wooden Buildings Are Cheaper

and Cleaner." Architecture And Design. N.p., 21 Apr. 2015. Web.

22 Apr. 2015.

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Upcoming Meetings

April 13 -14, 2015 Forest Growth and Yield Models –What Makes Them Work and What Makes Them Fail Portland, OR Email: [email protected]

June 3, 2015 WHA Board Meeting TBD Email: [email protected]

June 9, 2015 Washington Hardwoods Commission Annual Symposium Mt Vernon, WA Email: [email protected]

June 16, 2015 Mobile Technologies: Finding the Best Fit in Forestry Operations Grand Mound, WA Email: [email protected]

June 18, 2015 Mobile Technologies: Finding the Best Fit in Forestry Operations Springfield, OR Email: [email protected]

June 30 - July 1, 2015 Reviewing a Timberland Appraisal for Accuracy and Credibility Portland, OR Email: [email protected]

July 6-9, 2015 Advanced Insect and Disease Field Session Hood River, OR Email: [email protected]

August 18-21, 2015 Western Hardwood Association Annual Convention Portland, OR Email: [email protected]

Have upcoming event or company news? Let us know and we’ll help you get the word out, both here and on our website.

How can you help?

Its time to get ready for the Western Hardwood Association Annual Auction! For many years, the WHA has held its annual auction to raise funds to help insure a continual supply of hardwoods to market. Last year, between the silent and oral auctions and the raffle, we raised over $5,700. We are asking for your continued support in 2015. The annual convention will be in Portland, Oregon at the World Forestry Center August 18-21. Please, let us know what you are willing to donate this year. Contact us by email, [email protected] or call the office at (360)835-1600. If you aren’t sure what to donate, check out some of the ideas below from past auctions.

1. Save the Date, August 18-21, 2015

2. Email WHA and let us know what you can donate.

3. Register for the meeting.

4. Come prepared to learn, network, see exhibits, make a winning bid, and have a great time celebrating 60 years for WHA.

It is, as they say, like déjà vu all over again.

Like an updated version of “Back to the Future.” Like

the 1980s have returned—minus the leg warmers.

Because, believe it or not, the past week brought us

this headline: “Feds to consider endangered species

listing for spotted owl.” Talk about a flashback.

So why in the world, out of all the icons to

rekindle three decades later, would we bring back

arguments about the spotted owl? You recall how

concern for a creature that weighs less than 2

pounds helped topple the economy throughout much

of the Northwest, don’t you?

In the 1980s, you see, debate arose over the

northern spotted owl and led to the protection of old

growth forests, which happened to be the owl’s

habitat. By 1990, the spotted owl was

listed as a threatened species, and tree

harvests on federal lands in Oregon,

Washington, and Northern California fell

by 90 percent in the decade that

followed.

So now the U.S. Fish and Wildlife

Service has announced that a conservation group’s

petition contains enough new scientific information to

warrant a close look at changing the owl’s listing

from threatened to endangered. As reported last

week by the AP, “Paul Henson supervisor for Fish

And Wildlife in Oregon, says much has changed

since the owl’s original listing. In 1990, the biggest

threat was loss of old-growth forests where spotted

owls live, and now it is the invasive barred owl.” In

other words, a couple decades ago, loggers were

forced to stop being loggers with the notion that such

a move would save the spotted owl. Great idea—

until it wasn’t. That’s because halting logging did not

save the spotted owl, and now the problem is the big,

mean barred owl. Maybe they should try telling him

to stop behaving like an owl. - excerpted from Jayne,

Greg. "Jayne: It's Tough to Give a Hoot about This Blast from the

past." The Columbian. N.p., 12 Apr. 2015. Web. 20 Apr. 2015.

After 21 years, the U.S. Forest Service is

planning to essentially throw out the Northwest

Forest Plan. The tide seems to be slowly turning,

even among some Democrats, to the realization that

the federal timber harvest is seriously inadequate to

support rural communities. Once the changes are

complete, the Northwest Forest Plan, source of so

much misery in timber towns, will cease to exist, at

least in its current form. - excerpted from WFPA-One Voice

Blog, 4/13/15

In the new State of the Forest Products

Industry, the Forest Service notes that the United

States’ share of global wood products

production has declined since the 1990s.

Failure to manage our National Forests

has played a role in that decline. The

report notes that “in 1986, the Pacific

Northwest accounted for 26 percent of total timber

harvests, but by 1996, had dropped to 15 percent.”

According to statistics released by China

Customs, China’s forest products trade value was

138 billion USD in 2014, representing an increase of

9.5% compared with 2013. The export volume and

value of wood furniture, doors, and wood-based

panels all saw sizable increases in 2014, compared

with 2013.

The Sierra Club, along with several partner

groups are advocating for enforcement of the Lacey

Act. The environmental group placed

advertisements around the country the same week

that Lumber Liquidators, the nation’s top hardwood

flooring retailer, revealed the company could face

federal charges for importing illegally sourced

products. The ads targeted the forests in the

Russian Far East, stating rampant corruption and lax

enforcement have led to widespread illegal logging.

The Lacey Act, signed by President McKinley in

1900, was initially intended to prevent the poaching

of game and birds taken in one state and sold in

another. In 2008, the Lacey Act was amended to

broaden protections for a wide range of plants,

including trees and plants in countries outside the

United States, in turn helping protect communities,

jobs, and our climate by reducing the demand for

illegally sourced wood products.

The Hardwood Federation, of which WHA is a

member, was instrumental in the adoption of

amendments, also supported by a broad bipartisan

coalition of interests, including much of the domestic

wood products industry, labor unions, and

environmental organizations.

Following a House vote prior to the Easter-

Passover Recess, the Senate folded a 2-year

extension of the Secure Rural Schools (SRS)

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program into a “must pass” bill to prevent cuts to

physicians working with Medicare patients. After

passing the House by a vote of 392-37, the Senate

approved the bill 92 to 8. Meanwhile, efforts to move

a reform bill in the House Natural Resources and

Senate Energy & Natural Resources Committees

continue to percolate, although one has to assume

that 2 years of guaranteed payments takes off a lot

of necessary pressure for reform. - Bill Imbergamo,

FFRC Weekly, 4/17/15

Sleeping in the Clouds By Larry Dennis

On Monday, April 13, 2015, we all heard or read

the story of the baggage handler who was trapped in

the luggage compartment of Alaska Airlines Flight

448. When the crew heard him banging in a panic,

the flight made an emergency return trip to Seattle. A

drug test showed that he was completely sober.

The supervisor of this baggage handler also

seems to have been

"sleeping on the job." You

may say that I'm jumping

to conclusions and

perhaps I am. I know from

the employee opinion

surveys we have conducted in companies of all kinds

that certain shift worker employees have a long-

standing reputation for finding special spots for

taking naps. This seems to be well known by their

crews, and yet nothing is done about it. If you don't

stand up for standards, if you don't define standards

and inspire all team members to follow these

standards, there are high costs-the soft costs of

image and morale and the hard costs of operations

and profits. Your job as a manager, as a leader, is to

maximize the value of all resources. This baggage

handler was certainly not providing full value for

Alaska Airlines.

Let's look at the costs of this little nap. Alaska

Airlines stock price did drop on April 14. Certainly the

airlines underwent some hard costs, including the

fuel for takeoff and landing. "Jet fuel is the second-

largest expense to airlines after labor and can

amount to 20 percent of companies' operating

expenses. Planes use the most fuel . . . during

takeoff." (Planes Utilize Most Fuel During Takeoff.

Worldwatch Institute. April 15, 2015). The

inconvenience to the passengers on this flight cannot

be overestimated. Those making connections to

other flights no doubt found it difficult or impossible to

make those connections.

Alaska Airlines is an extremely well-managed

company. "Alaska . . . keeps its costs down in part

because it measures obsessively. The airline has

established 50,000 points of data to improve its on-

time performance, from the time bags are loaded and

passengers board to when the pilot pushes back

from the gate. It also figured out that if it could shave

just a minute of taxi time from each flight, it could

save 500 minutes, or over eight hours, a day-the

equivalent of flying an extra plane daily" (Alaska

Airlines Flying Above an Industry's Troubles. The

New York Times. March 2, 2013).

Now some are calling for more federal

regulations to make it safer for napping baggage

handlers. I am amazed how quickly some want to

shift the responsibility from the sleeping baggage

handler to the airline industry. If we don't hold people

responsible for their actions, we create an

irresponsible society. If no one takes personal

responsibility for quality and performance, you will

not fly high; in fact, you may not be able to get off the

ground. - Larry Dennis, Turbo Leadership Systems©. Web:

www.turbols.com

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